I-ve a question concerning a sequential game.
A and B share an apartment and can bargain about its cleaniness. A moves first
and announces his cleaning effort eA 0. B observes A’s decision and chooses eB 0.
Preferences: UA(eA, [View full text and thread]

I'm very interesting to study about the game theory. Could you tell me what is the point that I should start? Actually my math knowledge is not too good, but I hope I can learn the game theory without too much mathematics. My friend [View full text and thread]

Literature that I used only describes the development of game theory in social science until early 1980's. Could you give sugesstion for me, what literatures about the development of game theory in social science after 1980s until [View full text and thread]

In 1838, Cournot developed game models of oligopolistic competition, which he analysed by the methodology of Nash equilibrium. And he was writing more than a century before Nash. I think (it is just my opinion) John Nash did not find [View full text and thread]

Literature that I used only describes the development of game theory in social science until early 1980's. Could you give sugesstion for me, what literatures about the development of game theory in social science after 1980s until [View full text and thread]

Hi, I'm not an economist, but I'm interesting to know about game theory.
But after I read a number of game theory literature, it seems that the game theoretical analysis is too demanding informationally to be of any intuitive appeal. [View full text and thread]

Dear Rodrigo,
Thanks for your help about the references.
From the literature, it said that there is some limitation in game theory. In many games we have multiple equilibria and no way to choose, e.g. Edgeworths bilateral bargaining [View full text and thread]

Mathematical social sciences has game theory as its main branch in most classification schemes. As in Journal of Economic Literature classification, game theory appears in the mathematical methods field (C7).
[View full text and thread]

According to the literature on social norms, a society can end up in a "desirable" equilibrium (for instance, without overexploitation of natural resources) without formal incentives for "desirable" behavior, because people seek [View full text and thread]